Brothers Max (the younger, born in America) and Visarut (the elder, born in Thailand) have a business investigating paranormal activity. Max recently moved home to care for his schizophrenic mother and alcoholic brother, and they seem to be in a good place now. But the business is not doing very well, so Max, who handles the business/client side, finagles to get them a client. Max and Visarut, who handles the ghost stuff, go to the apartment of Delia and Felix to see if they can see the young Asian woman that Delia has been hearing and seeing. Felix shares that Delia's mother was also schizophrenic, and is worried that Delia might have inherited her mother's mental illness. He's counting on the brothers to prove that the ghost is real and Delia, therefore, is sane.
Delia (Regina Marie Williams) sees a ghost (with Kurt Kwan, Sherwin Resurreccion, and James Craven, photo by Allen Weeks) |
Director Lou Bellamy creates a delicious tension with this smart, funny, trippy script by Thai-American playwright Prince Gomolvilas, and has assembled a cast that just couldn't be any better. As Delia and Felix, Regina Marie Williams and James Craven are the perfect embodiment of a loving couple that has been together for many years, and are individually moving as well as their characters face their own unique struggles. Sherwin Resurreccion and Kurt Kwan (Max and Visarut) should always play brothers, so believable are they - funny and bickering but supportive. Sherwin's character is sort of the driving character of the story, and he beautifully portrays the complex but incredibly sympathetic Max and everything he's dealing with (it's a lot). Veteran of TV and the national stage, Leslie Ishii makes her #TCTheater debut as the brothers' mom and creates a touching portrait of an immigrant who moved to America for her family but never quite felt at home. Lastly, I don't want to say too much about Michelle de Joya's role, but she is the personification of Delia's ghost, and what she does is incredible and terrifying and just might give you nightmares.
Kudos to the entire design team (scenic designer Vicki Smith, costume designer Mathew LeFebvre, lighting designer Karin Olson, sound designer Scott Edwards, and properties designer Abbee Warmboe) for creating an all-around terrifying environment. The show wouldn't be this scary and effective without the dead silence, the creepy unexplained noises, the sudden darkness, the otherworldly light, the flying objects (oh yes, there are flying objects!), and the scary looking ghost woman.
This is your chance to experience two of #TCTheater's best companies, and the intersection of their traditions. Besides that it's a thoroughly gripping play that will have you laughing, jumping out of your seat, and contemplating the deeper issues at play.
The Brothers Paranormal continues at Penumbra Theatre in St. Paul through May 26 (click here for info and tickets, or here for discount tickets on Goldstar).